"Jade" <NOSPAM@yahoo.com> wrote in news:pLRic.1$Oo6.65@news-west.eli.net:
> One works on the case behind the scenes and never goes to court. The
> other goes to court, after having been given important information by
> the one that works on the case.
>
> "Matthieu" <staitouw3yv@jetable.nospamm.net> wrote in message
> news:408bcd85$0$20166$636a15ce@news.free.fr...
>> Could you make me a court answer with I could understand (I don't
>> speak wery well english)?
>> "What is the difference between the barristers and the solicitors?"
>> Thank you!
>>
>> Mattheu
>>
>>
>
>
>
I don't think it's quite that simple, although I appreciate that you may
have simplified things to aid understanding. Solicitors can go to court,
but only in lower courts, and in the high court you can only use a
barrister, but you can only approach a barrister through a solicitor, who
'instructs' the case, usually doing a lot of the preparation.
It is now also possible for the same person to be both a solicitor and a
barrister, although they can't act as both at once, i.e. they could appear
for you as a solicitor in a lower court, but they couldn't instruct
themself in the high court, so you would still need two people there.
Maybe the first explanation is a lot easier to understand, but the details
matter. I am neither a barrister nor a solicitor, BTW, and may not have it
quite straight myself!
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